Average Down Calculator โ€“ Find Your New Cost Per Share

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Average Down Calculator

Calculate your new average cost per share after buying more shares at a lower price. Add up to 10 purchase lots.

๐Ÿ“‰ Enter Your Purchase History
Add each buy order separately to calculate your new average cost basis.
Price per Share
Number of Shares
๐Ÿ“Š Average Down Results
New Avg Cost/Share
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Your blended price
Total Shares
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All purchases combined
Total Invested
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Total cost basis
Purchase Breakdown
#Price/ShareSharesTotal CostWeight

What Does “Average Down” Mean?

Averaging down is an investment strategy where you purchase additional shares of a stock or asset after its price has fallen below your original purchase price. By buying more at a lower price, you reduce your average cost per share โ€” which means the stock needs to recover less to reach your break-even point.

For example, if you bought 100 shares at $50 and the stock drops to $35, buying another 100 shares at $35 brings your average cost down to $42.50. Instead of needing the stock to recover to $50 to break even, you only need it to reach $42.50 โ€” a 21.4% difference.

Quick example: Buy 100 shares at $50 ($5,000 invested) โ†’ stock drops โ†’ buy 100 more at $35 ($3,500) โ†’ new average = $8,500 รท 200 shares = $42.50 per share. Break-even drops from $50 to $42.50.

Average Down Formula

// Average Cost Per Share Average Cost = Total Amount Invested รท Total Shares Owned // Example with two purchases: Total Invested = (Shares1 ร— Price1) + (Shares2 ร— Price2) Total Shares = Shares1 + Shares2 Average Cost = Total Invested รท Total Shares

Average Down Example: Step by Step

PurchasePrice/ShareSharesTotal CostAvg After
1st Buy$60.00100$6,000$60.00
2nd Buy$45.00100$4,500$52.50
3rd Buy$38.00200$7,600$45.25
Combinedโ€”400 shares$18,100$45.25

When Does Averaging Down Make Sense?

Strong fundamental thesis

Averaging down works best when you have high conviction that the underlying business is sound and the price decline is temporary โ€” caused by market sentiment, macro conditions, or short-term headwinds rather than deteriorating fundamentals. Warren Buffett’s approach of buying “wonderful companies at fair prices” often involves adding to positions during broad market selloffs.

Dollar-cost averaging (DCA)

A systematic version of averaging down is dollar-cost averaging โ€” investing a fixed dollar amount at regular intervals regardless of price. DCA naturally results in buying more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high, lowering your average cost over time without requiring market timing.

Index funds and ETFs

Averaging down is widely considered a sound strategy for broad market index funds and ETFs (like S&P 500 or NASDAQ 100 trackers), because diversified index funds have historically recovered from every drawdown. Regular DCA into index funds is one of the most evidence-backed long-term wealth-building strategies available.

When Averaging Down Can Be Dangerous

Warning โ€” “catching a falling knife”: Averaging down into a stock with deteriorating fundamentals, excessive debt, or a broken business model can amplify losses dramatically. Always distinguish between a stock that is temporarily cheap and one that is permanently impaired.
  • Concentration risk โ€” Repeatedly averaging down into one position can lead to dangerous over-concentration in a single name.
  • Broken fundamentals โ€” If the company’s earnings, competitive position, or balance sheet has genuinely deteriorated, a lower price may not be a bargain โ€” it may be a fair reflection of reduced value.
  • Leverage and margin โ€” Averaging down using borrowed money magnifies both potential gains and losses. A position can become a margin call if the price continues falling.

Averaging Down vs. Averaging Up

Averaging up means adding to a position as the price rises โ€” the opposite strategy. Momentum investors and trend-followers often prefer averaging up because it means adding to winning positions. Value investors typically average down. Neither approach is universally superior โ€” the right strategy depends on your investment philosophy, time horizon, and the specific asset.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is averaging down a good strategy? โ–พ
It depends entirely on the asset and your conviction. For diversified index funds with a long time horizon, averaging down (or DCA) is widely considered sound and evidence-backed. For individual stocks, it requires strong fundamental conviction that the business is solid and the decline is temporary. Averaging down into a genuinely deteriorating business โ€” one losing market share, burning cash, or facing structural disruption โ€” can compound losses significantly.
What is the break-even price after averaging down? โ–พ
Your break-even price after averaging down is simply your new average cost per share โ€” the number this calculator computes. If your average cost is $42.50, the stock needs to trade at or above $42.50 for your position to be profitable (ignoring transaction costs and taxes). Averaging down reduces this break-even price compared to your original purchase price, which is the primary benefit of the strategy.
How many times should you average down? โ–พ
There is no universal rule, but most disciplined investors set position size limits before averaging down โ€” for example, never letting a single stock exceed 5โ€“10% of their total portfolio. Some investors plan their averaging strategy in advance: buy in thirds, with predetermined price targets for each tranche. This prevents emotional decision-making and caps the downside risk from a single position becoming too large.
Does averaging down work for crypto? โ–พ
Many crypto investors use DCA strategies for Bitcoin and Ethereum, averaging in during bear markets to reduce their cost basis. Given crypto’s extreme volatility, DCA can smooth entry points significantly over a full market cycle. However, crypto averaging down carries higher risk than index fund DCA because individual tokens can and do go to zero. Stick to the highest-conviction, most liquid assets (BTC, ETH) if applying this strategy to crypto.
What is the difference between average down and dollar-cost averaging? โ–พ
Averaging down is a reactive strategy โ€” you buy more specifically because the price has fallen. Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) is a systematic, time-based strategy โ€” you invest a fixed amount at regular intervals (weekly, monthly) regardless of price direction. DCA can result in averaging down naturally during market declines, but it also involves buying at higher prices during rallies. DCA removes emotional decision-making from the equation, which is its primary advantage over discretionary averaging down.
Disclaimer: This average down calculator is for informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Averaging down into declining positions carries risk of significant loss. Always do your own research and consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions.

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